Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/65532
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Type: Journal article
Title: Adoptive transfer of peripheral immune cells potentiates allodynia in a graded chronic constriction injury model of neuropathic pain
Author: Grace, P.
Hutchinson, M.
Bishop, A.
Somogyi, A.
Mayrhofer, G.
Rolan, P.
Citation: Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, 2011; 25(3):503-513
Publisher: Academic Press Inc
Issue Date: 2011
ISSN: 0889-1591
1090-2139
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Peter M. Grace, Mark R. Hutchinson, Alan Bishop, Andrew A. Somogyi, Graham Mayrhofer, Paul E. Rolan
Abstract: Recent evidence demonstrates that peripheral immune cells contribute to the nociceptive hypersensitivity associated with neuropathic pain by infiltrating the central nervous system (CNS). We have recently developed a rat model of graded chronic constriction injury (CCI) by varying the exposure of the sciatic nerve and control non-nerve tissue to surgical placement of chromic gut. We demonstrate that splenocytes can contribute significantly to CCI-induced allodynia, as adoptive transfer of these cells from high pain donors to low pain recipients potentiates allodynia (P<0.001). The phenomenon was replicated with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (P<0.001). Adoptive transfer of allodynia was not achieved in sham recipients, indicating that peripheral immune cells are only capable of potentiating existing allodynia, rather than establishing allodynia. As adoptively transferred cells were found by flow cytometry to migrate to the spleen (P<0.05) and potentiation of allodynia was prevented in splenectomised low pain recipients, adoptive transfer of high pain splenocytes may induce the migration of host-derived immune cells from the spleen to the CNS as observed by flow cytometry (P<0.05). Importantly, intrathecal transfer of CD45(+) cells prepared from spinal cords of high pain donors into low pain recipients led to potentiated allodynia (P<0.001), confirming that infiltrating immune cells are not passive bystanders, but actively contribute to nociceptive hypersensitivity in the lumbar spinal cord.
Keywords: Adoptive transfer
Allodynia
Animals
Chronic constriction injury
Central nervous system
Neuropathic pain
Rat
T lymphocyte
Rights: © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2010.11.018
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbi.2010.11.018
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Pharmacology publications

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